AimPoint Express

NEW: Putting Boot Camp w/ AimPoint Express

PUTTING BOOT CAMP

Now with AimPoint Express!!

Are you sick and tired of being a bad or simply average putter? If so, the Putting Boot Camp is designed for you to start making more putts than ever before. This 3 sessions in 4 weeks package is designed to utilize the latest technology and techniques available to quickly improve your putting.

Session #1 - Sam Putt Lab Stroke and Putter Evaluation (45 minutes)

Session #2 - Sam Putt Lab Training and Drills (90 minutes)

Sessions #3 - Green Reading w/ AimPoint Express (90 minutes)

All sessions must be used within 4 weeks of your first session.

Cost is $475 and includes all sessions.

Schedule you first session by clicking the link below and selecting "Putter Fitting/Evaluation with Sam Putt Lab".

AimPoint Founder Mark Sweeney to Join July 7th AimPoint Express Clinics!

Don’t Miss This Opportunity to Learn One of Golf’s Top Green Reading Methods Alongside Its Founder!

AimPoint founder, Mark Sweeney, will be joining me on the University of Kentucky’s practice green at the University Club of Kentucky on July 7th for two AimPoint Express Clinics. Sign up today so you can learn the green reading method that the world’s top players are using!

Space is very limited so be sure to sign up for one of the clinics using the links below. Each clinic will last around 2 hours and is limited to the first 10 registrants. The cost is $200 per person.

Register Below!!

Text questions to Tyrus York at 859-274-6558

Tuesday's Tip: Read It, Roll It, and Hole It!

When it comes to golf instruction, it is easy to fall into the trap of taking on too much information. The true value of a well qualified instructor is that they can help you, the player, sort through all pertinent information so that you can quickly get to work on what matters most in your golf game.

Putting is no different in that something that seems so simple in technique can actually paralyze the mind with too much information. That is why I try to adopt the message you see in the title of this post…

Read It, Roll It, and Hole It!

Taken from one of the best putting books I’ve read in a long time, Hole It! by John Dunnigan, embracing the simple slogan above is a great way to cut through the clutter and focus on what will matter most in your putting. Dunnigan accurately points out that there are only three skills required to be a good putter:

  1. Skill of controlling your speed

  2. Skill of ability to hit your line

  3. Skill to read a green

Here at the High Performance Golf Academy, we’ve embraced the importance of those three skills. Notice how the skill of a certain putting stroke, or even the ability to aim is not listed above. Now… will your ability to accomplish the first two skills effectively be easier if you’re aiming at your target? Probably. But at the end of the day you only need to be good at the three skills above.

As an instructor I have dedicated a lot of time and resources in finding all the ways to help my players improve their putting. With tools like Sam Putt Lab, and now AimPoint Express for green reading, I feel that I am truly equipped to help golfers of all skill levels be their best on the greens.

In addition to the AimPoint Express clinics I am offering (check them out by clicking here), I offer what I’m calling a Putting Boot Camp for those that are serious about investing in improving all three of the skills listed above. The best part is that we will use one of the sessions to learn AimPoint Express, which you will quickly see is an amazing way to efficiently read greens.


PUTTING BOOT CAMP

Now with AimPoint Express!!

Are you sick and tired of being a bad or simply average putter? If so, Putting Boot Camp is designed for you to start making more putts than ever before. This 3 sessions in 3 weeks package is designed to utilize the latest technology and techniques available to quickly improve your putting.

Session #1 - Sam Putt Lab Stroke and Putter Evaluation

Session #2 - Sam Putt Lab Training and Drills

Sessions #3 - Green Reading w/ AimPoint Express

All sessions are 45 minutes and must be used within 3 weeks of your first session.

Cost is $375 and includes all sessions.

Click Here to schedule your first session and let’s get to work on improving the three skills you need to be a great putter!


Check out John Dunnigan’s Hole It! below…

Tuesday's Tip: AimPoint Facts and Fiction

Cutting through the clutter of information and disinformation on social media and the internet can be a full time endeavor. Whether it’s sports or politics, there seems to be an over abundance of people with differing opinions, and in some cases differing “facts”.

This week I want to cut through the clutter of information surrounding AimPoint, specifically AimPoint Express.

The motivation to tackle this topic right now comes from a particularly strange couple weeks for Aimpoint. It began with Keegan Bradley going through a green reading process that looked like AimPoint, only to miss his putt badly. This led to a crowd of online hecklers that poked fun of the fact he used what they thought was AimPoint and it didn’t work. (The truth is… although it appeared he was attempting to use AimPoint, what he did is NOT what is taught, aside from the fact that his speed control was off which would render any read he made likely useless).

Then, just as things started to quiet down, a kid (literally a kid less than 13 years old) was spotted using AimPoint at Augusta National during the Drive, Chip, and Putt Finals. The kid used the green reading process (way more accurately than Keegan Bradley did), which took an incredible 15 seconds to complete! Can you believe that?!? Someone taking 15 seconds to read a putt, especially a really important putt! Who does that??

Yes… that is sarcasm because we see on a weekly basis players on the PGA Tour using their fully allotted 40 seconds (sometimes longer) to read putts using methods not called AimPoint, if they even have a method at all. But because someone uses AimPoint, instead of using their eyes, it’s considered a bad look and bad for the game?

So what is AimPoint? AimPoint is a green reading technology (or system, technique, method, whatever you want to call it) developed by Mark Sweeney. It began as a very technical system that involved using a book to look up your correct read.

Believe it or not, about 12 years ago, Larry Ward and I participated in one of the first AimPoint clinics in the state of Kentucky. However, we both agreed that AimPoint in it’s current state was simply not usable for many of our clients.

Apparently Mark Sweeney agreed because it wasn’t long after that when he created AimPoint Express. This is what you see people now doing (or in Keegan Bradely’s case attempting to do). The biggest noticeable difference is that the books used to read the green are gone. Instead there is an expedited process that involves using your feet to feel the tilt of the green and assign it a number. You then take the number you felt and use the corresponding number of fingers to determine your line.

One concern, and the one I’ve always found the most legitimate, was that in order to feel the tilt of the green that is affecting your putt, you have to get in the line of your own putt between the ball and the hole. In the early days this had to be done with a somewhat “code of ethics” by straddling your line and avoiding actually making contact with your intended line of play (which would be a penalty). But now the USGA has decided (albeit for other reasons) that intentionally touching your line on the putting green is no longer a penalty. Therefore opening the floodgates for people to walk in their own line in order to feel the tilt.

Another concern is that when walking in your own line you may interfere with the line of another player. This one is easy… just don’t do it. You can always make a slight adjustment to where you need to stand in order to avoid stepping in another player’s line.

The biggest misconception with AimPoint Express is that it negatively affects pace of play. As we mentioned earlier, good players that are trying to grind out a made putt during a round will take a lot of time to do so. The Tour gives them about 40 seconds. This is a long time. However, when used correctly from beginning to end, AimPoint Express should take no longer than 20 seconds. In most cases it will take less than 10. However, if you want to use it, you better learn how to use it properly by attending an AimPoint Express class taught by any of the several certified instructors across the country.

Or you can log in to Twitter and make fun of what you don’t understand, which seems to be the route of many people that I would normally consider trustworthy and knowledgable individuals. (sorry for the sarcasm again)

If you are interested in actually learning what AimPoint Express is and how to use it, click here to check out the multiple opportunities I am offering.


Looking for a great mat to work on putting indoors? We have the one below at the High Performance Golf Academy and it has been great!

Tuesday's Tip: Line? Logo? Blank? Using Your Ball to Aim Putts

In what is sure to be the most hotly debated topic in golf (lol I doubt it)… Should you or should you not use your line on the golf ball to aim your putts?

This question is asked almost every time I give a putting lesson to someone new. And every time I give the same answer: it depends.

So what does it depend on? After all, when using the PGA or LPGA Tours as examples or a place to find best practices on stuff like this, there doesn't seem to be a clear answer.

Before we go head first in settling this debate, it is important to understand exactly what the three skills are that makes a great putter:

  1. Speed Control

  2. Direction Control (ability to make the ball roll on your intended line)

  3. Green Reading

Please note that Aim is not listed above. This means that it is entirely possible for you to be a great putter but not necessarily be very good at pointing your putter precisely on your intended line. Now, that doesn't mean that I would ignore poor aim in the middle of a putting lesson. I believe that it is always better to know where grandpa’s gun (aka the putter - I stole this from putting guru and Flatstick Academy founder David Orr) is pointing. But there are some cases throughout history of some excellent putters that did not point the putter on their intended target line.

Tiger Woods may be the most famous of these putters, as he was notorious for aiming his putter about 2-3 degrees to the right of his intended line (although not necessarily on purpose). In Sam Putt Lab terms, that is a lot.

So now that we know it isn’t a big deal if you aim precisely on your intended line, should we even worry about using the ball to help us aim?

I tell my players the following if they are considering using the line or logo on the ball to help aim:

Use the line or logo IF…

  • You can accurately point the line or logo precisely on your intended line in two attempts or less. In other words, you can set the ball down, check the line, then fix it one time. If it takes more attempts than that you are running into a pace of play issue and you should not be wasting time using the line!

    • This doesn't mean you need to give up ever using the line of logo. Just simply get to a practice green and rehearse using the your ball to help you aim.

  • You can make the line on your putter match the line or logo of the ball. It drives me crazy when a player goes through the trouble of setting the ball up only to abandon their work and aim somewhere else. Even worse, you must be able to see if the line on the putter matches the ball or not (this happens way more often than you might think).

  • It does not affect your ability to control your speed or hit your line. I’ve seen too many players (me included) that get so caught up in their initial line that they lose their feel or try to steer the ball precisely on the line, versus being an athlete and stroking the putt.

It is the last bullet point that I believe needs more conversation. Currently I have developed a hybrid model in determining whether to use the line or logo in my own game. I will use the logo on the ball for any putt inside 8 feet, which is when I am less concerned about getting the speed correct. Personally, I felt myself lose the ability to feel good speed control when getting locked in on my line for longer putts.

That being said, now that I am AimPoint certified and my green reading confidence is at an all time high, I may extend how far back I use the logo (or line) to closer to 20 feet. Why this distance? Anything inside 20 feet is considered a makable putt. Outside 20 feet and the goal is to get it close and avoid three putts! And the more confident I am that my line is correct, the more energy I can direct to making a good stroke with good speed control.

So what should you do? The answer is experiment! Just make sure you are following the three guidelines above and you are good to go on using the line!

Do you need help deciding or just need to get better at one of those three skills required to be a good putter? Contact me and click here to learn more about my programs and how I can improve your putting. Specifically, click here to learn about green reading with one of my upcoming AimPoint Express Clinics!

If you're going to use the line, I recommend the tool below to make sure you are getting the most accurate line you can possibly draw on your ball.

Learn Tour Quality Green Reading with AimPoint Express at HP Golf Academy

2022 AimPoint Express Clinics at HP Golf Academy

LEARN TOUR QUALITY GREEN READING

Learn the method that the best players in the world rely on, including several World #1 Ranked players.  

•  Discover how to read any putt accurately in less than 10 seconds

•  Learn how to adapt to changing green speeds 

•  Works on any green on any golf course

•  Used by players of any ability 

DATES

All clinics will be conducted by Tyrus York, PGA on the putting green at the Keene Run Course of Keene Trace Golf Club

  • March 12 @ 12:30 PM

  • April 4 @ 5:00 PM

  • May 14 @ 12:30 PM

Click the links to register below!!

Tuesday's Tip: Thoughts to Improve Putting

Are you a good putter?

How you answer this question will say a lot about your current ability (obviously) but also your potential. I’m going to go on a limb and say that never in the history of the game has there been a great putter that thought they were bad. I’ll even go a step further and say that there’s also never been a bad putter that thought they were great.

I know that’s subjective and impossible to measure, but my point is that the stronger your belief that you are a great putter, the more likely you can become one. There are many players out there that may underestimate how good they are. And there’s a few bad ones that think they’re not so bad. What is important is that the first step in becoming a great putter is to simply believe you can be one.

So enough mumbo jumbo of how to think about yourself… what else do you have to do in order to be a great putter?

Putting requires you to be good at three skills and three skills only:

  1. Reading the Green

  2. Hitting Your Line

  3. Speed Control

Over the last 6 years I have been using Science and Motion’s Sam Putt Lab to help players identify what is making it difficult for them to hit their line and/or control their speed. Now, with AimPoint Express in my toolbox, I can help players complete their quest to putting greatness by showing them an extremely simple and effective way to read a green.

As much as I’d love to spell it all out for you here in this article, I’m contractually not allowed to do so. That being said, make sure you are on the lookout for AimPoint Express clinics that will be exclusively hosted by your’s truly at the High Performance Golf Academy.

I realize how boring putting is to most players, especially recreational golfers. But for those of you that care about your score, I would encourage you to let me help you improve your putting now! And if you’ve never used AimPoint Express, there’s low hanging fruit that you can pick to get that improvement going very soon.